41 Verbs to Use for the Word orchestras

It's awfully jolly!" Curtain falls, and Baker wakes up to lead his orchestra through the mazes of "Shoo Fly." Appreciative Lady.

Armitage waved his hands amidst the uproar as if he were conducting an orchestra.

This musician was in the service of Frederick the Great, and finding himself one night on duty under the windows of the King, playing the Jew's harp with so much skill, that Frederick, who was a great amateur of music, thought he heard a distinct orchestra.

R120023, 27Oct53, Bernice Stern & Ruth Solomon (E) How to enjoy the orchestra.

The prisoners have formed an orchestra, and organised theatrical performances, for which they have painted pretty scenery.

" They found a small auberge before which Hermia unpacked her orchestra and played.

Then came one of those times that it takes a whole orchestra and a gallery of paintings to tell any thing about: for Mrs. Lee as well as her husband was on the beach; and within a minute after "Captain Kinzer" and his crew had landed, poor Dick was being hugged and scolded within an inch of his life, and the two other boys found themselves in the midst of a perfect tumult of embraces and cheers.

Philidor unpacked Clarissa and recited in a loud tone the now familiar inventory of their artistic achievements and Yvonne, smiling, donned her orchestra, tuned her mandolin and played.

Making an orchestra.

But it certainly was a sensation to face that immense orchestra, and I had something to do to make my sinews bear me stiffly up.

I'm not a fool" Suddenly she sprang down the rock away from him, and, before he knew what she was about, had fastened her "orchestra" around her and was making the air hideous with sound.

It would be difficult to find another orchestra in which the violins and basses are throughout in such excellent hands.

His name was Singleton and his former master invited the orchestra to come to his house and play for the family.

He gave enough music lessons to pay his small expenses, although after one or two stormy passages in which he treated with outrageous and unjustifiable violence the dawdling pupils coming from well-to-do families, he made it a rule to take no pupils whose parents employed a servant, and confined himself to children of the poorer classes, among whom he kept up a small orchestra which played together twice a week and never gave any concerts.

He was invited there by a great seigneur, who, although he could not abide music himself, maintained an orchestra from a love of display.

He closed his eyes and shrugged his massive shoulders"I may need the massed orchestras of half the world, the chorused voices of the entire nationor in their place a still small voice of utter purity crying in the wilderness!

The musicians had their instruments sent in and organized an orchestra.

I have, since my return to England, been into a beautiful old parish church in one of the midland counties; the building was in a most deplorable state of dilapidation, and the communion-rail formed a music-stand, while inside were placed an orchestra of two fiddles and a bass-viol.

Yvonne was to beat her drum and play her orchestra on the platform outside, and this would attract the people, already anxious to behold the wonders within, a foretaste of which would be given, when the crowd gathered, by Cleofonte, who would life a few heavy weights and introduce the Signora, the Child Wonder, and Tomasso, the bear.

To my own feeling, this post-office service recalled some mighty orchestra, where a thousand instruments, all disregarding each other, and so far in danger of discord, yet all obedient as slaves to the supreme baton of some great leader, terminate in a perfection of harmony like that of heart, veins, and arteries, in a healthy animal organization.

In fact, as I was to learn later, I could have recruited a full orchestra among the Tommies, and I would have had in my band, too, musicians of fame and great ability, far above the average theater orchestra.

Externally should also be noted (1) the vigorous, though defaced, series of gargoyles above the S. porch, representing an amateur orchestra; (2) the remains of a stoup; (3) the curious chamber at the S.E. end of the S. transept.

The thickets of palmetto and the groves of magnolia filling the air with new and cloying fragrance, alternating with other unaccustomed odors which made the grove resemble an orchestra of perfumes, were to me a new and delightful experience.

Then he leaned forward over the rail that separated orchestra from audience.

"They would set that mechanical orchestra playing out of pure astonishment.

41 Verbs to Use for the Word  orchestras